Parisian Walkways: Village Jourdain in Belleville

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PA R I S I A N WA L K WAY S ❘ V I L L AG E J O U R D A I N

VILLAGE JOURDAIN This small community in the 19th and 20th arrondissements remains a little different from the rest of Paris. Jeffrey T Iverson meets a new generation of artisans and entrepreneurs…

FROMAGERIE BEAUFILS

MAISON DEMONCY-VERGNE

LIBRAIRIE LA CARTOUCHE

10 rue du Jourdain Tel. +33 (0)1 46 36 66 08 Satisfying discerning sweet-tooths since it opened in 1887, this jewellery-box pastry shop encapsulates the history of French desserts, from their perfect mille-feuille and Paris-Brest to their elegant, eye-grabbing new creations bursting with exotic flavours. Everything is prepared by hand, from chocolates and macarons to petits-fours sandwiches – in short, everything for a chic lunch to go!

7 rue du Jourdain Tel. +33 (0)6 80 98 28 88

118 rue de Belleville Tel. +33 (0)1 46 36 61 71

On a street known for its bookstores, Olivier Delautre created the one thing bibliophiles were missing – a fabulous antiquarian shop. Delautre has curated a collection of literature from Dante to Hemingway, complemented by works of poetry, art and history, and including everything from inexpensive paperbacks to exquisite rare editions by such French giants as Balzac, Maupassant and Jules Verne.

When Christophe Lesoin took over this historic crèmerie in 2011, he brought a breath of fresh air to the Parisian cheese world – his new approach focused on raw-milk cheeses sourced directly from small producers, aged to perfection, and presented to customers with transparency and competitive prices. His selection of goat’s cheeses is among the best in Paris, as is the quality of friendly service.

L

ine 11 of the Paris Métro makes stops at some of the French capital’s liveliest plazas, from Châtelet and Hôtel de Ville with their throngs of tourists, theatregoers, and commuters, to the Pompidou esplanade with its spectacle of performers and portrait artists, to the colourful chaos of skateboarders and political activism on place de la République. But continue on the line just a bit further to the stop named Jourdain, take the long escalator ride up to the exit, and you’ll find yourself stepping onto a plaza of a very different kind. A kaleidoscope of blooms from flower stands greets you. Tall, green trees shade a street gently sloping down before you, while a lovely, doubled-spired Gothic-revival church looms overhead. People relax on café terraces, gaze at pastry shop windows and browse through outdoor book stalls. Cars roll by, but somehow the air seems fresher here. If this resembles no other plaza in Paris, it’s perhaps because for a long time it wasn’t part of Paris at all. Welcome to the hilltop neighbourhood known as Village Jourdain, the historical centre of the once-free commune of Belleville.

The 19th-century Gothicrevival Église Saint-JeanBaptiste de Belleville greets you as you emerge from Jourdain Métro station

In the shadow of Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Belleville, at 10 rue du Jourdain sits the elegant pastry shop Demoncy-Vergne, better known to generations of locals as La Pâtisserie de l’Église. When the shop first opened in 1887, Belleville had already been annexed to Paris for 27 years. Yet, even today, locals still seem to forget that. “I often catch myself saying things like, ‘I need to go to Paris today,” laughs pastry chef Jean-Claude Vergne. “Of course we are in Paris here, but for us it’s also a village, the old heart of what was formerly the independent village of Belleville.” In those days, bourgeois (residents of the bourg, or city) from Paris regularly climbed this hill to dance and drink in the guinguettes of Belleville, where wine was exempt from state taxes, being beyond the Paris customs barrier. And though technically independent no more, in many ways this ‘village’ remains as self-sufficient as ever. “Village Jourdain is my neighbourhood, and I must admit that I rarely leave it,” says Julie Leclerc, a children’s literature specialist for rue du Jourdain’s Librairies L’Atelier. “Just walk around a bit and you realise that beyond the bookstores there are also little

54 ❘ FRANCE TODAY Oct/Nov 2019

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03/09/2019 11:20


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Parisian Walkways: Village Jourdain in Belleville by jeffreytiverson - Issuu